AuthorTopic: Pressing the buttons accidentally (Read 3632 times)

I wrote about this in the reviewthread since I had a hunch that this could happen. Now it's happened several times and it's happen more often since I started wearing gloves. I'm talking about the accidental pressing of the stopbutton. For me it mostly occurs when doing pushups during the run. Since I mostly run at evenings I don't see the display and if i don't hear the stopsound the watch can be off for minutes. Not very much to do more than just be aware of it and suggest other buttonplacement for next model. There is a physical workaround offcourse. Pushups on the knuckles.....Brrr......

I wrote about this in the reviewthread since I had a hunch that this could happen. Now it's happened several times and it's happen more often since I started wearing gloves. I'm talking about the accidental pressing of the stopbutton. For me it mostly occurs when doing pushups during the run. Since I mostly run at evenings I don't see the display and if i don't hear the stopsound the watch can be off for minutes. Not very much to do more than just be aware of it and suggest other buttonplacement for next model. There is a physical workaround offcourse. Pushups on the knuckles.....Brrr......

Perhaps they could implement an optional "LOCK" feature that you could turn on inside the watch's options menu so that you could press a certain key combination to get into and out of the LOCK mode(which would lock all button features except for the PWR/Backlight button), such as pushing and holding the ESC/LAP button for 3 seconds to toggle it on or off. The only problem with that is you might have to combine it with the watches Auto Start/Stop feature to make it so that you can accurately stop your watch when you finish a run without first having to hold the ESC/LAP button down for 3 seconds to disable the LOCK mode and then hitting the STOP button

I have quite a lot of comparisons fail because the other device hits the stop button.Even with only the 625XT, I have done as Anders and pushed the button with my clothes.It is also a little unnatural to push the buttown where it is now, thumb-index finger goes easily diagonal but not across the clock - not so well timed stops.

The natural position is to me opposite to the lap button, i.e. right lower side.

OK. I've mentioned the problem with accidently stopping the watch during workout before. It has now happened to me a couple of times and it's as annoying everytime if you don't notice immediately. For me it has happened both while doing pushups and while running. since i run off trails sometimes I have to halfclimb or pass obstacles in various ways and sometimes my wrist is flexed in that extent that the top of my hand touches the stopbutton. This could be fixed with a button either on the front of the watch like polar for instance or preferrably on the upperside like on the kalenjiwatch.

I have held for about two months the Kalenji CW700, and the arrangement of buttons is really satisfactory.For the problem you've described, you may propose to include in the next firmware option for left handed, reversing the buttons from right to left and vice versa, so instead of stopping, you should turn on the light, but in the worst case you may switch off the clock.

since i run off trails sometimes I have to halfclimb or pass obstacles in various ways and sometimes my wrist is flexed in that extent that the top of my hand touches the stopbutton.

This is exactly what happens to me all the time. I often have to scale fences, rock walls, or fallen trees while running out in the bush and don't notice that I've hit the stop button while my wrist was angled perpendicular to my forearm. It sucks when you don't realize it stopped for like another 15 minutes and then your whole workout timing and pace measurement is completely lost.